Experimental Study on the Acoustic Characteristics of Nanosecond Pulsed Discharge in Atmospheric Air

被引:0
|
作者
Li H. [1 ]
Luo H. [1 ]
Chen Z. [1 ]
Li Y. [1 ]
Zou X. [1 ]
Wang X. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Electrical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing
来源
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Acoustic wave; Discharge energy; Gap distance; Nanosecond pulse discharge; Wave equation;
D O I
10.13336/j.1003-6520.hve.20201068
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Nanosecond pulse discharge has many advantages in sound production. For example, it owns wider frequency domain response and smaller components, and is suitable for some harsh surrounding environments, etc. In the field of nanosecond pulse air discharge, the researches on the relationship between electrical signal and acoustic signal and the principle of sound generation are rarely available in the literature. In this paper, an experimental platform for electrical and acoustic joint diagnosis was built. The electrical and acoustic signals were collected in real time under different pulse discharge energy and discharge gap distances, and the variation law of the peak sound pressure with different experimental parameters was summarized. The experimental results show that a single nanosecond pulse air discharge can produce pulse sound wave with microsecond pulse width. The amplitude of pulse sound pressure increases with the increase of pulse discharge energy and gap distance. The peak value of sound pressure increases by about 3 Pa for every 1mJ of pulse discharge energy, and about 20 Pa for every 1mm gap distance. Based on the experimental results, the wave equation of gas pressure in the process of sound generation is introduced, and a mechanism assumption of conversion from electricity to sound in nanosecond pulse discharge is proposed. © 2021, High Voltage Engineering Editorial Department of CEPRI. All right reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:840 / 848
页数:8
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [1] DUDDELL W D B., Some experiments on the direct-current arc, Nature, 63, 1625, pp. 182-183, (1900)
  • [2] BASTIEN F., Acoustics and gas discharges: applications to loudspeakers, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 20, 12, pp. 1547-1557, (2000)
  • [3] SUTTON Y, MOORE J, SHARP D, Et al., Looking into a plasma loudspeaker, IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, 39, 11, pp. 2146-2147, (2011)
  • [4] ARATA Y, INOUE K, FUTAMATA M, Et al., Investigation on welding arc sound (report I): effect of welding method and welding condition of welding arc sound(welding physics, processes & instruments), Transactions of JWRI, 8, 1, pp. 25-31, (1979)
  • [5] BOLKE O, LACOSTE D A, MOECK J P., Low-frequency sound generation by modulated repetitively pulsed nanosecond plasma discharges, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 51, 30, (2018)
  • [6] LIU J Z, WANG J, ZHANG G X, Et al., Frequency comparative study of coal-fired fly ash acoustic agglomeration, Journal of Environmental Sciences, 23, 11, pp. 1845-1851, (2011)
  • [7] WANG Jie, Study of combined acoustic agglomeration with other means to remove coal-fired fine particles, (2012)
  • [8] HOU Shuanquan, WU Jia, XI Baoshu, Experiments on acoustic dissipation of water fog at low frequency, Experiments and Measurements in Fluid Mechanics, 16, 4, pp. 52-56, (2002)
  • [9] UNO I., Acoustic wave generation and amplification in a plasma, Physical Review, 145, 1, pp. 41-46, (1966)
  • [10] MAZZOLA M S, MOLEN G M., Modeling of a dc glow plasma loudspeaker, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 81, 6, pp. 1972-1978, (1987)